Acharya Prashant explains that in spirituality, words like 'Master' or 'Owner' do not have an affirmative or positive meaning. Instead, they serve to negate their opposites. To be a 'Master' simply means to not be a slave. He emphasizes that spiritual terms are often misunderstood as descriptive qualities of Truth, whereas their actual purpose is to dismantle false notions. For instance, the term 'Formless' is used only to break the human tendency to limit the Truth within a form. He clarifies that a true Master is not someone who exercises authority or control, but someone who is not bound by tendencies, the world, or objects. Truth is the ultimate non-doer, and because it has nothing to do, everything happens smoothly through it. He further discusses the concept of 'Maha-mukti' or Great Liberation, which transcends the duality of slavery and mastery. He describes three levels of existence: the first is total slavery to the world and ego; the second is a state of rebellion where one claims not to be a slave but still carries the scars and fear of slavery; and the third is a state where even the fear of slavery disappears. In this third state, one is free to either hold on or let go without being bound by either action. Acharya Prashant asserts that real relationships can only exist between two liberated individuals, comparing it to two birds flying together in the sky rather than being confined in a cage. He concludes that peace and freedom are not destinations to be reached in the future but are our inherent nature, available in the present moment once the search for something 'special' ends.